3.1 Pre-2016 Regulatory Framework
Prior to 2016, India’s civil aviation sector operated under the Aircraft Act, 1934, supplemented by the Airports Economic Regulatory Authority of India (AERA) Act, 2008.The principal regulatory constraints affecting airline entry and operations included:
The 5/20 Rule (2004-2016): Introduced through Union Cabinet decision in October 2004, the 5/20 rule stipulated that Indian carriers seeking international operations must have maintained domestic operations for a minimum of five years and operated a minimum fleet of 20 aircraft. This restriction was unique to India; international aviation practice imposed no such requirements on domestic carriers desiring international expansion.
The 5/20 rule’s intent was to protect incumbent carriers during a stabilization period, preventing new entrants from immediately pursuing lucrative international routes. However, the rule generated substantial industry criticism as inefficient, protectionist, and contrary to competitive principles. The restriction forced capital constraints on airlines—they accumulated excess capacity on domestic routes while unable to redeploy aircraft to higher-margin international operations.
Impact on Carrier Competition: The 5/20 rule contributed to questionable strategic decisions. Kingfisher Airlines’ problematic acquisition of Air Deccan in 2007, for instance, was motivated partly by the desire to access Air Deccan’s longer operational history to bypass the 5/20 restriction. This acquisition, intended as a competitive shortcut, contributed substantially to subsequent financial deterioration and ultimately to Kingfisher’s exit from operations.
3.2 The National Civil Aviation Policy 2016 (NCAP 2016)
Approved by the Union Cabinet on 15 June 2016, the NCAP 2016 represented the first comprehensive civil aviation policy framework issued since 2004, addressing the sector’s structural constraints and outlining a modernization agenda.
3.2.1 5/20 Rule Modification: From Protectionism to Liberalization
The NCAP 2016 introduced a fundamental modification to international operations requirements, replacing the 5/20 rule with a revised metric structured as follows:
Policy Requirement: All Indian airlines may commence international operations provided they maintain either (a) a fleet of 20 aircraft, or (b) 20% of total domestic seat capacity (measured as average seats on all departures collectively), whichever is higher.
Implications of the Revision:
- Elimination of Temporal Restriction: The previous five-year operational requirement disappeared entirely, enabling newly-established carriers to pursue international operations after developing minimal domestic presence.
- Capacity-Based Flexibility: The revised metric permitted airlines without 20 aircraft to nonetheless qualify for international operations if they deployed 20% of the total domestic fleet’s cumulative capacity, creating flexibility for regional carriers operating smaller aircraft.
- Monitoring Mechanism: The policy specified that published airline schedules would serve as monitoring basis, with assumptions of six departures per aircraft daily for capacity calculations.
Strategic Rationale: The NCAP 2016 explicitly acknowledged that the previous 5/20 requirement was “unique to India” and inconsistent with international practice. The policy justified revision through extensive stakeholder consultations, recognizing that the rule created an uneven competitive playing field between Indian carriers and foreign competitors, who faced no equivalent restrictions in accessing Indian territory.
3.2.2 Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS-UDAN)
The NCAP 2016 introduced the Regional Connectivity Scheme (later branded as RCS-UDAN— Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik, meaning “Common Citizen’s Journey”), targeting the expansion of air services to underserved and unserved regions.
Core Features: - Subsidized Fares: Targeted fare cap of ₹2,500 per passenger for regional routes (distance 500-600 km, approximately one flight hour), indexed to inflation. Viability Gap Funding (VGF): Government subsidy provided through a Regional Connectivity Fund, financed through levies on non-regional domestic flights. Infrastructure Development: Revival of underutilized airports as “no-frills” facilities at indicative cost of ₹50-100 crore without insistence on financial viability. - Tax Incentives: Service tax abatement of 90% on regional route tickets, 2% excise duty on aviation fuel, and nominal airport charges for 10 years from route commencement.
The RCS scheme addressed a critical market gap: despite India’s geographic size and population, only 75 of 450 airstrips/airports possessed scheduled operations as of 2016. The scheme’s demand- driven approach anticipated that airline operators would identify commercially viable routes when subsidies eliminated financial barriers.
3.2.3 Route Dispersal Guidelines (RDG) Rationalization
The NCAP 2016 reformed India’s Route Dispersal Guidelines, which since 1994 had compelled airlines to internally cross-subsidize unprofitable routes to remote regions (Northeast India, island territories, Jammu & Kashmir) and lower-tier cities by restricting their capacity share on highly profitable “Category I” trunk routes.
Revised RDG Framework: - Category I Routes: Redefined with objective criteria (>700 km distance, >70% average load factor, >5 lakh annual passengers over two full schedules) rather than administrative designation. - Periodic Review: Category I routes subject to rationalization every five years, with implementation effective from winter schedule 2017, allowing airline operational planning flexibility. - Cross-Fleet Trading: Airlines permitted to trade Available Seat Kilometers (ASKM) between regional aircraft and larger jets to meet RDG requirements, enabling composite regional network strategies.
These reforms represented a shift from administrative capacity allocation toward demand-based, performance-metrics assignment, theoretically enabling more efficient market-driven routing decisions while maintaining regional connectivity commitments.
3.2.4 Other Significant NCAP 2016 Provisions
Aviation Security and DGCA Autonomy: The policy promised DGCA administrative and financial autonomy for aviation safety oversight, commitment to zero-tolerance for safety violations, and implementation of an eGCA (electronic DGCA) project for single-window system automation. DGCA was authorized to impose fines and penalties for regulatory violations and to review all Civil Aviation Requirements (CARs) every five years rather than on ad-hoc basis.
Code-Share Liberalization: Domestic code-share agreements were liberalized within Air Service Agreement frameworks, enabling Indian carriers to enter code-share arrangements with foreign carriers to any Indian destination available under bilateral agreements, with 30-day notification rather than prior approval required.
Bilateral Air Services Liberalization: The policy contemplated “Open Sky” agreements with South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries and nations located entirely beyond 5,000 km radius from New Delhi, permitting unlimited flight frequency above existing bilateral entitlements directly to/from major international airports.
Ground Handling and MRO Provisions: The policy mandated a minimum of three Ground Handling Agencies (including Air India subsidiary) at major airports, permitted self-handling by airlines, and provided duty exemptions for Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) tools and components to develop India as a regional MRO hub.
3.2 The Aircraft Amendment Act 2020
The Aircraft Amendment Act, 2020 (No. 13 of 2020), received Presidential assent on 19 September 2020 and was formally notified on 20 September 2020. This amendment represented the first statutory recognition granted to India’s principal aviation regulatory bodies, establishing them as constitutionally-recognized institutions rather than executive structures operating under administrative procedures.
3.2.1 Statutory Formation of Regulatory Bodies
Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA): The amendment established DGCA as a statutory body with formal legal personality. The Director General of Civil Aviation, appointed by the Central Government via official gazette notification, heads the organization with explicit statutory authority for safety oversight and regulatory functions specified in the Act and related rules.
Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS): Formerly an internal DGCA division, BCAS was established as an independent statutory body with dedicated Director General responsible for civil aviation security regulatory and oversight functions.
Aircraft Accidents Investigation Bureau (AAIB): Previously conducted investigations under DGCA supervisory authority, the AAIB was constituted as an independent statutory investigation body with sole responsibility for aircraft accident and incident investigations, creating separation between investigation (AAIB) and regulation (DGCA)—a critical international best practice recommended by ICAO.
3.2.2 Government Superintendence and Appellate Structure
The amendment retained Central Government superintendence authority over the three bodies, permitting the government to issue directions deemed necessary and to review orders in public interest. However, the amendment introduced specific appellate procedures: appeals against DGCA or BCAS orders may be filed with the Central Government, with no further appellate recourse permitted beyond government review.
This structure attempted to balance regulatory independence with democratic accountability, though the finality of government review (without further judicial appeal) represented a departure from typical administrative law principles separating executive, regulatory, and judicial functions.
3.2.3 Enhanced Penalty Provisions
The amendment significantly increased maximum penalties for aviation violations. Penalties under the previous Aircraft Act were capped at ₹10 lakh (one million rupees). The amendment raised maximum civil penalties to ₹1 crore (10 million rupees), applicable to contraventions of various rule categories including aircraft-related activities, international convention implementation, accident investigation, public health protection, and aircraft detention.
Designated Officer Framework: The amendment established a Designated Officer framework (officers not below Deputy Secretary rank) appointed by the Central Government to adjudicate penalties. Designated officers are empowered to impose penalties via written order specifying contravention nature, applicable rule provisions, and penalty justification. Reasonable opportunity for hearing is mandated prior to penalty imposition.
3.2.4 Compounding of Offenses
The amendment introduced provisions for compounding (settlement) of specific offenses related to regulatory contraventions. The Director General of DGCA, BCAS, or AAIB (or specially empowered officers) may compound offenses before or after prosecution institution, subject to Central Government direction and control.
Restrictions on Compounding: Offenses committed for a second or subsequent time within five years of prior similar offense or prior conviction are ineligible for compounding, preventing habitual violators from obtaining immunity through settlement arrangements.
3.4 The Bharatiya Vayuyan Vidheyak 2024 (Proposed Indian Aviation Act 2024)
The proposed Bharatiya Vayuyan Vidheyak (Indian Aviation Act) 2024, introduced in the Lok Sabha on 31 July 2024, passed the Lok Sabha on 9 August 2024, and passed the Rajya Sabha on 5 December 2024, seeks to replace the 1934 Aircraft Act entirely with modernized legislation aligned with contemporary international standards.
3.4.1 Legislative Objectives
The Bill’s stated objectives include: (a) modernizing India’s civil aviation regulatory framework;
(b) streamlining regulation under unified DGCA authority; (c) strengthening aviation safety oversight; (d) updating penalty provisions; and (e) aligning India’s aviation laws with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs).
3.4.2 Key Proposed Provisions
DGCA Autonomy and Regulatory Powers: The Bill retains and extends DGCA’s primary role in safety oversight and regulatory functions, with clarified authority to regulate aircraft design (addition to existing manufacturing, possession, use, operation, sale, import, and export regulation).
Central Government Superintendence: The Bill preserves Central Government superintendence over DGCA, BCAS, and AAIB, permitting the government to review or modify these bodies’ orders via published orders, subject to public interest considerations.
Enhanced Penalty Authority: The Bill grants the Central Government discretionary authority to specify civil and criminal penalties for various contraventions. Civil penalties may reach ₹1 crore rupees; criminal penalties encompass imprisonment up to two years, fines up to ₹1 crore, or both.
Scope: The Bill applies to activities including aircraft design, manufacturing, possession, use, operation, sale, import, and export; international convention implementation; accident investigation; public health protection; and aircraft detention authority.
3.4.3 Alignment with International Standards
The Bill explicitly references alignment with ICAO standards as a primary objective. As a contracting state to the International Civil Aviation Organization, India remains bound by ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs) concerning aircraft operations, personnel licensing, and airworthiness. The Bill’s modernization facilitates India’s compliance reporting and international credibility in aviation safety and security oversight.